Little Buck Cheeser (1937) Poster

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6/10
Of rodents and rockets
Horst_In_Translation10 February 2018
Warning: Spoilers
"Little Buck Cheeser" is an American 7.5-minute cartoon from 1937, so this sound and color movie had its 80th anniversary last year and it is is another work directed by the prolific Rudolf Ising and voiced by the equally prolific Bernice Hansen as females voicing (young) male characters wasn't too uncommon back then. And well, look at Bart Simpson too. Anyway, this one here lives off the premise of a few little mice being hungry for cheese and flying to the moon as that one consists entirely of cheese obviously just like the milky way consists of milk obviously. The story as well as the dream sequence revelation near the end are not too great and the latter feels a bit like they needed a quick way to end the film to keep it from becoming too long, but still the animation is good, the audio side too (music, voices, sound effects) and there is some nice attention to detail here that makes me say that this film does not need to hide behind what Disney and WB did during the same time. After all, Ising was really successful during that period too if you look at how he was appreciated at the Oscars. So yeah, watch this little movie, good to be checked out by the young and the young at heart and kids will especially love these cute mice characters. Okay I did too, no denying there. This one gets a thumbs-up from me.
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5/10
Fly me to the moon
TheLittleSongbird19 September 2022
Love animation, it was a big part of my life as a child, particularly Disney, Looney Tunes, Hanna Barbera, Studio Ghibli and Tom and Jerry, and still love it whether it's film, television or cartoons. With significantly broader knowledge of different directors, animation styles and studios, actually appreciate and love it even more now. Rudolf Ising was very hit and miss, some of his cartoons were very charming and engaging, others despite great animation and music were bland.

1937's 'Little Buck Cheeser' is fairly typical of Ising and a good deal of the Happy Harmonies cartoons, leaning towards the cute kind of cartoon with a lot of sentiment in alternative to the laugh a minute and hilarious kind, the latter being the one that a lot seem to prefer (understandably, though am hardly biased against the former). This approach has varied with Ising. In some instances it has been very sweet and charming, in others it can be cloying and too cutesy. Some fit in the former category, others in the latter category. 'Little Buck Cheeser' is one of too many Happy Harmonies cartoons (a very uneven series of cartoons) to be in the latter and not do it. It is marginally better than the very mediocre previous Little Cheeser cartoon, but it is very easy to see why he didn't last long.

It is not all bad by all means. Its best asset is the animation, it's vibrantly and atmospherically coloured and shaded, beautifully drawn and rich in meticulous background detail. The lunar visuals are very eye catching. The music is another big plus, it's lushly orchestrated, full of charm and character and fits with the visuals beautifully.

Despite being too far and between, there are moments of endearing charm and a few mildly amusing moments.

However, 'Little Buck Cheeser' has a lot working against it. It is significantly undone by Little Cheeser, don't be fooled by the cute exterior because he is anything but in personality. Instead he is very bland, too cloying and later on also too much of an annoying brat. Have nothing against Bernice Hanson, but she voices him with too much of a shrill voice and it is not pleasant on the eardrums. The story is barely existent and there are times when it drags.

Too much of the cartoon is too saccharine and cloying and there are very few laughs. Much of what there is is not funny and isn't really amusing either. The ending is very rushed and felt like the cartoon had run out of gas.

Concluding, watchable but not really recommended other than as an animation completest sake or if one wants to see more of Ising. 5/10.
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6/10
kiddie cartoon
SnoopyStyle16 July 2022
Little Cheeser and his little friends are obsessed with the moon. One of his friends is sure that it's made out of green cheese. Little Cheeser gets inspired by a Buck Rogers comic. The group builds a rocket to go to the moon.

It's a Harman and Ising cartoon. It is plenty cute but the resolution could have been something more imaginative than a dream. This isn't bad. It's a kiddie cartoon but it could have been more.
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5/10
Buck Cheeser Returns
boblipton30 November 2019
Harman & Ising's Buck Cheeser returns from is movie premiere the previous year. He's still living in a jug in a basement with his mother, but one evening, after she tells him to go to sleep, he leaves the jug to join with his hundreds of friends who are using a telescope to look at the moon. Inspired by a Buck Rogers cartoon, they decide to build a spaceship to go to the moon.

there's little to reproach Rudolf Ising for in the way of technical expertise. His skilled staff has produced a beautifully detailed cartoon, with all the usual cartoon tropes (the Milky Way is shown as a series of clattering milk bottles) and sight gags (there's a "Los Angeles City Limits" sign on a distant planet). My issues, as always in this period is with the unalloyed sweetness of their cartoon -- I like a bit more spice in my cartoons -- and with Bernice Hansen's squeaky, little boy's voice. For those who think children are cuteness and little else, this will be much more palatable.
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